Siren Records McHenry
3902 Main Street
McHenry, Illinois 60050
815-347-8363
SUMMER HOURS
MONDAY CLOSED
TUESDAY CLOSED
WEDNESDAY 11-6pm
THURSDAY AND FRIDAY 4-8pm SOMETIMES LATER
SATURDAY 11-6
Sunday 11AM-4PM
Artist:Mark Lanegan Band
Format: CD New: Not in Stock Online call for in-store availability
Wish
Formats and Editions
DISC: 1
1. When Your Number Isn't Up
2. Hit the City
3. Wedding Dress
4. Methamphetamine Blues
5. One Hundred Days
6. Bombed
7. Strange Religion
8. Sideways in Reverse
9. Come to Me
10. Like Little Willie John
11. Can't Come Down
12. Morning Glory Wine
13. Head
14. Driving Death Valley Blues
15. Out of Nowhere
More Info:
This is the first new album in three years from ex-Screaming Trees front man and Queens of the Stone Age vocalists. BUBBLEGUM features members of Queens of the Stone Age, PJ Harvey, Greg Dulli from Afghan Whigs/Twilight Singers, Izzy and Duff from Guns N Roses/Velvet Revolver, and members of Earthling, Eleven, and en "A darl jearted rock triumph - Maxim"
Reviews:
When superstars like David Bowie and Neil Young reinvent themselves it's headline news, but cultish figure Mark Lanegan has been no less successful a shape shifter throughout his career, despite his lower profile. Lanegan's virulent rock side was always in full freak mode with Screaming Trees, but his solo work (begun during breaks from Screaming Trees, continued after the band's dissolution) has focused upon quiet acoustic reflections and rootsy explorations. On last fall's EP, Here Comes That Weird Chill (Methamphetamine Blues, Extras, And Oddities), Lanegan merged folk/blues introspection with the Trees' flailing rock abandon with satisfying results, including a faithfully energetic cover of Captain Beefheart's "Clear Spot" and the Tom Waits-on-crank blister of "Methamphetamine Blues." Bubblegum is the full-length expansion of that synthesis, a similarly weird and wonderful hybrid of loud/hushed, hard/soft, and sparse/dense dynamics. Lanegan balances the full bore rock of "Methamphetamine Blues" (here a shambling T. Rex-covers-Howlin' Wolf cut) and the high-voltage riffing of "Sideways in Reverse" against the Eno-like ambient power of "Come to Me" (a duet with P.J. Harvey), the Jeff Buckley-channeling reverence of "One Hundred Days," and the sinewy Nick Cave intensity of "Can't Come Down." As broad ranging and unrelated as these tracks might seem, Lanegan flawlessly unifies these disparate styles into his own unique sound.
"When superstars like David Bowie and Neil Young reinvent themselves it's headline news, but cultish figure Mark Lanegan has been no less successful a shape shifter throughout his career, despite his lower profile. Lanegan's virulent rock side was always in full freak mode with Screaming Trees, but his solo work (begun during breaks from Screaming Trees, continued after the band's dissolution) has focused upon quiet acoustic reflections and rootsy explorations. On last fall's EP, Here Comes That Weird Chill (Methamphetamine Blues, Extras, And Oddities), Lanegan merged folk/blues introspection with the Trees' flailing rock abandon with satisfying results, including a faithfully energetic cover of Captain Beefheart's ""Clear Spot"" and the Tom Waits-on-crank blister of ""Methamphetamine Blues."" Bubblegum is the full-length expansion of that synthesis, a similarly weird and wonderful hybrid of loud/hushed, hard/soft, and sparse/dense dynamics. Lanegan balances the full bore rock of ""Methamphetamine Blues"" (here a shambling T. Rex-covers-Howlin' Wolf cut) and the high-voltage riffing of ""Sideways in Reverse"" against the Eno-like ambient power of ""Come to Me"" (a duet with P.J. Harvey), the Jeff Buckley-channeling reverence of ""One Hundred Days,"" and the sinewy Nick Cave intensity of ""Can't Come Down."" As broad ranging and unrelated as these tracks might seem, Lanegan flawlessly unifies these disparate styles into his own unique sound. "